Myself and a few of the crew have just been through a little bit of hassle while replacing our front crank bearings.
The jist of it is that mine was water damaged/seized, and therefore had to be replaced. No worries, all done. Put the engine back together and ran fine.
After a few routine checks that I always perform after having the engine out/apart, I noticed that the flywheel cover was so hot that I couldn't hold my hand on it for any longer than about 2 seconds.
Upon pulling the engine out, I found the front bearing had the outline of the crank case oil gallery in the middle of nowhere rather than having it around the oil gallery hole in the bearing itself. Upon further inspection, it turns out the oil gallery hole is on the equal but opposite side of where it's supposed to be.
My mate had recently had one replaced, so I rang him to find his was also like this, but the crank hadn't been run or put into an engine yet. It turns out mine was bad enough for me to warrant tossing it.
I rang my crank guy and found that he has been using WSM front bearing for some time, and had him a little worried.
The bottom line is, even though you have a new bearing from WSM, and everything lines up nice with the crank/cases, it doesn't mean that the oil gallery hole is lined up! It might be worth checking this if you have or are going to use a WSM bearing(s).
The jist of it is that mine was water damaged/seized, and therefore had to be replaced. No worries, all done. Put the engine back together and ran fine.
After a few routine checks that I always perform after having the engine out/apart, I noticed that the flywheel cover was so hot that I couldn't hold my hand on it for any longer than about 2 seconds.
Upon pulling the engine out, I found the front bearing had the outline of the crank case oil gallery in the middle of nowhere rather than having it around the oil gallery hole in the bearing itself. Upon further inspection, it turns out the oil gallery hole is on the equal but opposite side of where it's supposed to be.
My mate had recently had one replaced, so I rang him to find his was also like this, but the crank hadn't been run or put into an engine yet. It turns out mine was bad enough for me to warrant tossing it.
I rang my crank guy and found that he has been using WSM front bearing for some time, and had him a little worried.
The bottom line is, even though you have a new bearing from WSM, and everything lines up nice with the crank/cases, it doesn't mean that the oil gallery hole is lined up! It might be worth checking this if you have or are going to use a WSM bearing(s).